Monday, March 10, 2014

The Living Page: The First Three Weeks

When I first heard about Laurie Bestvater's new book, The Living Page, I wasn't sure I wanted to read it. I was fairly certain I would end up feeling guilty about all the notebooking I should be doing but wasn't. However, I wasn't taking into account my pregnancy and how that changes my ability to think well and consider new things. I tend to just react, not ponder and grow in my practices. I wish I could figure out how to maintain my higher brain functions and be pregnant, but after five tries I'm fairly convinced that it isn't something I can do. Thankfully my pregnancy induced intellectual stupor seems to be wearing off, and this is coinciding nicely with Jen's discussion of The Living Page.

I am rather behind, but I wanted to share a few thoughts about the first three weeks. First of all, I am finding this book extremely encouraging. Second, this book, along with Celeste's thoughts on digital keeping, have helped me realize how much keeping I do already. I do keep a physical commonplace book (although it hibernated during my pregnancy) which I was drawn to pick up again about six weeks after my daughter's birth. I also keep a private website where I post pictures of the family and commentary about our doings for friends and family (and if you are friends or family and don't have the URL, email me and I'll pass it along!) and again, now that I'm no longer pregnant that is getting updated fairly regularly as well. I also write in Day One several times a week, the only keeping I managed to continue through my pregnancy. Day One is a place where I write about the doings of the day, as well as about what I'm reading, pondering, and considering. I also keep reading logs for myself and my two older children.

These first few sections of The Living Page also reminded me about the keeping I have tried to maintain, but haven't managed to do consistently. For example, the nature notebook with the last entry of December 2012, the Calendar of Firsts that for two years has not made it past May, and a sketchbook of drawing exercises that hasn't seen an entry since September of 2013. And the less we talk about the notebook with "Before 3000 B.C." written on the first page with nothing else following, the better I'll feel. And then there's my daughter's Book of Centuries that hasn't seen an entry since the fall. And the kids' nature notebooks that haven't seen entries since the spring of 2012. I had hoped to encourage and inspire them to make their own nature notebook entries as I made my own, but it didn't work out that way!

Even with this deficiencies staring me in the face, I still am encouraged. How could I not be, after reading words like these?

Mason has shown me that the notebooks can be forms of vitality, literally the shape and outline, the liturgy of the attentive life. They nurture the science of relations and the art of mindfulness. p. xv

What if the emphasis is meant to be on the formative process -- the growing person who feasts upon and then share the Great Ideas in creating the art, rather than the artifact or achievement itself? p. 15

Isn't it encouraging to think of notebooks being part of the formative process of growing person, a person who is learning to consider, ponder, and explore the great ideas of what it means to be a person and a child of God?

And because I do want to share something that has been part of our formative process this year, I want to share another quote and piece of work from my daughter's time in Atrium. And while this focus on the product may seem to contradict the quote about the formative process, I think that they are harmonious because the beauty of the created work is part of the process and part of the meditation, which is certainly part of the formation of the person.

Beautiful script is also a value in itself; Sundays were often spent by P.N.E.U. students working on a beautiful rendition of a particular passage on fine paper. p. 30

6 comments:

So glad to see you jumping in too, Amber. :) I can soooo relate to your comment about pregnancy brain right now! LOL

"Isn't it encouraging to think of notebooks being part of the formative process of growing person, a person who is learning to consider, ponder, and explore the great ideas of what it means to be a person and a child of God?"^^This is a great way to sum it up!

I loved seeing the Atrium work. We are not involved in Atrium, but I couldn't help making the connection between the Atrium calligraphy Jenn at Family in Feast and Feria has been posting and all this Keeping talk. :) That Catholic tradition of illumination and script in religious work is definitely related--very harmonious, as you mentioned.

I saw Jenn's calligraphy work as well and thought of this quote. My daughter has really enjoyed her time in the Atrium. I'm hoping that perhaps this summer we can work on a set of cards like Jenn made for our prayer table at home.

This is wonderful, Amber! I love the selection you chose to share from your daughter's Atrium work! I completely agree with you here:

>> while this focus on the product may seem to contradict the quote about the formative process, I think that they are harmonious because the beauty of the created work is part of the process and part of the meditation, which is certainly part of the formation of the person. <<

I found many new ideas for shoring up our notebooking habits, too! And I completely revamped how we use history tools after reading - so I'm right there with you in being open to improve and refresh! I definitely agree that this book has just enough inspiration and practical to be of real use!

So glad you're able to add some of your thoughts and I can't wait to read more as you're able to post!

Thanks, Jen! I just finished reading the history keeping section and I'm still mulling it over. There's a lot to consider here, and there's a lot that is new to me as well. Thanks for the encouragement!

Me

About

My name is Amber, and I'm a Catholic homeschooling mother of six children, ranging from due in August to fifteen years old. I try to order our homeschool to Charlotte Mason's philosophy of education. We live in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains in California.